October 2, 9:56 a.m.: Carrie Williams, a spokeswoman with the Texas Department of State Health Services, has issued the following statement regarding Duncan's potential number of contacts:

"We are working from a list of about 100 potential or possible contacts and will soon have an official contact tracing number that will be lower. Out of an abundance of caution, we're starting with this very wide net, including people who have had even brief encounters with the patient or the patient's home. The number will drop as we focus in on those whose contact may represent a potential risk of infection."

October 2, 10:23 a.m.

A Reuters report from last night says that Duncan vomited outside of The Ivy on Sunday. Mesud Osmanovic told Reuters he was nearby as Duncan was heading to the hospital. "[Duncan's] whole family was screaming," he said. "He got outside and he was throwing up all over the place."

KDFW says that a report issued with its logo about Ebola in Frisco is a fake.

October 2, 10:42 a.m. : Amy Silverstein reports on the scene at The Ivy, the apartment complex at which Duncan was staying. A City of Dallas spokesman says reporters are scaring residents.

October 2, 11:38 a.m. : The owner of The Ivy says the CDC is monitoring Duncan's family and providing them with essentials. Residents of the complex will have an Ebola information session later Thursday.

October 2, 12:05 p.m. : Supposedly, you can view the CDC press conference live at this link, but the video isn't working for me yet.

Also, this from the Associated Press:

BREAKING: Liberia officials say they will prosecute man who brought Ebola to US for lying on health form.

October 2, 1:32 p.m.: Mayor Mike Rawlings, County Judge Clay Jenkins, DISD superintendent Mike Miles and Dr. Paul Pepe, the City of Dallas Medical Director will provide an Ebola update from the county commissioners' courtroom at 2 p.m.

Miles says first priority is children's safety. Nurses are making additional rounds at affected school. Miles says DISD does not think there is Ebola at the schools, cleaning is just an extra precaution.

"I think the message is getting out and people do feel safe," he says. That's why kids are still attending school.

Attendance at five schools attended by students who had contact with Ebola patient in Dallas at 86 percent, usually at 95 or 96. #talkdisd.

DCHHS director Zach Thompson compares Ebola investigation to what happens after a food poisoning case is discovered at a restaurant or a tuberculosis case is discovered at a school: "It's a wide circle and then it gets reduced."

Thompson: County is in process of evaluating where a potential second patient would be taken, but there is NO evidence of a second case.

Jenkins: Dallas emergency rooms prepared for Ebola in August. The judge adds that Presbyterian is doing as excellent job of treating Duncan.

.@JudgeClayJ: "Duncan family members did not want to stay home." So that's why they were legally ordered to.